Grenate

Grenate

Grenate, Krebs, so v.w. Granate od. Garneele.


Pierer's Lexicon. 1857–1865.

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  • grenade — [16] The original grenades were small spherical explosive filled cases with a wick on top. In shape, they bore more than a passing resemblance to pomegranates. The Old French term for ‘pomegranate’ was pome grenate, or just grenate for short, and …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

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  • pomegranate — (n.) early 14c., poumgarnet, from O.Fr. pome grenate, from M.L. pomum granatum, lit. apple with many seeds, from pome apple, fruit + grenate having grains, from L. granata, fem. of granatus, from granum grain. The Latin was malum granatum seeded… …   Etymology dictionary

  • pomegranate — [ pɒmɪgranɪt] noun 1》 a spherical fruit with a tough golden orange outer skin containing many individual segments of sweet red gelatinous flesh. 2》 the tree that bears pomegranates, native to North Africa and western Asia. [Punica granatum.]… …   English new terms dictionary

  • pomegranate — /ˈpɒməgrænət / (say pomuhgranuht) noun 1. a several chambered, many seeded, globose fruit of medium size, with a tough rind (usually red) and surmounted by a crown of calyx lobes, the edible portion consisting of pleasantly acid flesh developed… …  

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  • pomegranate — [14] The pomegranate is etymologically the ‘many seeded apple’. The word’s ultimate ancestor was Latin mālum grānātum (mālum gave English malic ‘of apples’ [18], and grānātus was derived from grānum ‘seed’, source of English grain). In Vulgar… …   Word origins

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